Congress Looks at Doing Away with $! Bill

The biggest reason that all the prior $1 coins failed is because they kept the $1 bill. Why would you have both? I don't see a $.25 bill or a
ten-cent bill. Either way, they need to make up their mind about which they will use.

$4.4 billion over 30 years is such a drop in the bucket that we shouldn't even be worrying about it. We could save $4.4 billion by stopping our
foreign occupation in less than a month, and countless other things that the government wastes our money on.

I'm a US citizen but I lived in Canada for 7 years. I don't understand why people are worried about weight. How many one dollar bills do people
usually carry on them? Unless you get paid in singles and have like 20 bucks in loonies on you they're not heavy. Maybe if you have some kind of
rare disease that makes you unable to carry what weighs less than a pack of cigarettes it would be a problem.

I thought I might not like it either then I lived there for 2 days and realized it's a better system. Like universal healthcare.

It's totally a reluctance-to-change issue. And the misconception that they're going to be carrying Hogwarts money.

I hated the change over from paper bills to the Canadian loonie and toonie at first, but then got used to it and find it handy for vending machines
and such.

The one thing though is the weight of them. If I'm paying twenty bucks for something, I tend to dig through my purse counting out loonies and
toonies in order to get rid of the excess weight. You'd be surprised how much coinage you accumulate over a short period of time because it's just
easier to pull out the wallet and pay with paper bills most times. We women have bottomless pits for purses and eventually find all kinds of goodies
in there (change, gum, kitchen sink, reciprocating saw, etc)... so the weight does tend to accumulate if you don't clean it out regularly.

But like one poster mentioned, most people tend to toss their change into a jar at home... and when it's $1/$2 dollar coins, you end up with a nice
chunk of money on hand for a rainy day.

It's really not a big deal guys, and if it can save the taxpayer money overall with reduction of printing costs, why on earth would you be opposed ?

Every penny of savings for your country is a benefit, not a liability.

How will the strippers keep the coins from falling out of their G strings?!?!

Ah...

Now here's a group of individuals who will benefit the most from getting rid of the $1 bill. When there's no more of those, the men then start
stuffing $5 bills in their g-strings instead.

I would sometimes join the boys on a Friday liquid lunch. They always went to the bar for the buffet, cheap bubblies, and the stripper afternoon
entertainment. Laughed my butt off watching them shove $5 bills down the g-strings while the oddball cheap SOB would try to plunk a loonie/toonie
down the front of the gal's undies every now and then... until the rest of the guys would start taunting him for being so bloody cheap.

Originally posted by SpaDe_
So will strippers start wearing coin purses around their waists? I mean how I am supposed to put a $1 coin in a g-string honestly.

On a
serious note I really like my $1 bills because they are light weight in my pocket and easy to carry. Could you imagine walking up to a convenience
store counter that runs out of $10 bills and has to give you $13 dollar coins for change?

I hear in Canada you have to tip a stripper $5, because that's the lowest Canadian bill. So I suppose if they got rid of $1 bill strippers will make
a lot more money.

The Congress has been trying to shove $1 coins down our throats for decades. First the ones that actually were decent and meaningful with the Silver
Dollars....Then the Susan B. Anthony's that went over like a rock because people do NOT want a dollar coin that can be mistaken in a pocket for size
to a quarter. Some of these Congressmen today were actually serving back then and ought to recall personally why that one was rejected before making
the new one with the SAME problem. The changes to the edge didn't change the problem of size to the touch. Doh!

Now they're just down to FORCING it on us by taking the alternative outright. Yeah, that's Government lately. They'll ask us nicely and if the
people don't like their idea they WILL insure we obey by force or lack of option eventually.

Well let's see, the first $1 coin was made in 1794 and the first dollar bill was made in 1861. For 67 years the USA had $1 coins. And ever since the
introduction of the $1 bill, they have been trying to reintroduce the coinage to no avail. I usually only have about 20 bucks in my pocket at any
one time. If my pocket get about 1-2 dollars worth of change, it is irritating to me. But I would forgo the irritation to save money for in this
country. I am sick and tired of every money saving idea being tossed into the 'it's only a drop in the bucket' sea of sh#t when the total of these
drops equal many many many billions of dollars.

Originally posted by ganjoa
Since so many people seem opposed to $1 dollar coins because they look like quarters - evidently most of those folks are BILND since the current $1
coins are gold colored unlike any other coins we've got. Yeah the Susan B Anthony dollars were pretty much a bust and they mostly got melted, but I
go to the bank and get rolls of shiny gold dollars to carry around - they make great impressions on most folks.

Why don't we start minting $2 coins to replace the Jefferson $2 bill nobody seems to observe outside race track bettors windows? Perhaps this would
help overcome the resistance to $1 coins we're experiencing. On the other hand, forget about $5 coins they'd be too cumbersome to carry in change
for a Jackson.

ganjoa

What is even better is handing a younger kid working at a store a $2 bill. Bless her little heart she thought I was trying to pass off fake currency.
The current Sacajawea Dollar is at least a different color and slightly larger than a quarter if I remember. I would definitely prefer it over some
of the dollars I have come by in my life time where I wonder how it doesn't just disintegrate.

Some one else may have mentioned this already but can you imagine how many cash machines, vending machines, etc. will have to be changed! That is a
serious expense!

You would be surprised how many already have the capability to accept the coins. As long as the slot is large enough to accept the coin, a small
modification to the "verification" mechanisms and a coin catch would be a nice boost to some companies out there.

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